WAYNE COUNTY FOUNDATION, Richmond
FUND NAME: Women’s Fund
TYPE: Special interest
SOURCE OF FUNDS: Individual donors; major event (annual luncheon featuring silent auction with 100 donated works of art); luncheon underwriters
WHEN ESTABLISHED: 2001
GRANTS: First given in 2006, total to date, $258,000
HOW MANY MEMBERS: 200 attend annual luncheon
GOVERANCE: No formal structure; luncheon committee determines luncheon theme and grant recipients
RESEARCH: Informal
PROUDEST OF: “When we started, we had no idea it would grow to be what it is. We just thought that there was a need. We had seen women’s foundations in different places, and we wanted this. We’re a small community of 35,000, our county’s about 50,000. We wanted it to make a difference in our community. I’m proudest of women who have been changed.” — Mary Jo Clark, co-founder Women’s Fund
FUND NAME: Women Helping Other Women
TYPE: Giving circle
SOURCE OF FUNDS: Annual membership dues of $500; individual donors; endowment
WHEN ESTABLISHED: 2008, added endowment in 2011; has just over $15,000 in assets
GRANTS: To date, nearly $72,000
HOW MANY MEMBERS: 22
GOVERNANCE: Group consensus; Wayne County Foundation staff person executes
RESEARCH: Informal, shared by foundation staff
FUND NAME: Girls That Just Want to Give
TYPE: Giving circle
SOURCE OF FUNDS: Annual membership dues of $300
WHEN ESTABLISHED: 2014
GRANTS: To date, $21,450
HOW MANY MEMBERS: 15
RESEARCH: Informal, shared by foundation staff
FUND NAME: Women with a Purpose
TYPE: Special interest
SOURCE OF FUNDS: Endowment; annual women’s conference; option to donate individually
WHEN ESTABLISHED: 2007
GRANTS: First $400 given last year; endowment of $12,800 started in year five of conference
HOW MANY MEMBERS: 103 conference attendees in 2019
RESEARCH: Informal, shared by foundation staff
GOVERNANCE: Workshop at the conference with attendees becoming the grants committee; aim is help attendees understand the grant selection process and the difficulty of saying “no.”
RESEARCH: Informal, shared by foundation staff
PROUDEST OF: Growth from the women’s conference. “When I came here, I realized that we still have the good old boys’ network too much. We were talking to the men when we were talking about charitable giving but weren’t including women in those conversations. I started trying to make a difference in how we approached that, and trying to get the women involved more. I set up the women’s conference, a one-day conference. It’s a day of networking, and learning and honing skills and being together with other women from the community.” —Rachel Hughes, Wayne County Foundation development officer
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF CENTRAL INDIANA, Indianapolis
FUND NAME: Women’s Fund
TYPE: Special interest
SOURCE OF FUNDS: Donations to endowment and operating fund
WHEN ESTABLISHED: 1996, now has a $16 million endowment
GRANTS: To date, $7 million
GOVERNANCE: Advisory board with officers; grants committee of about 20
RESEARCH: No original research, but uses research that’s compiled by others; will occasionally fund research, particularly through the Indiana Institute for Working Families to help inform the work the fund does with economic mobility
PROUDEST
OF: “We’re really proud of the work we have done with Grameen to establish a
branch of Grameen Indianapolis to help women who are living in poverty become
small-business owners and to become economically independent and really change
the trajectory of their lives. We’ve made a very bold investment with Grameen.
We gave them a half million dollars along with the Indianapolis Foundation and
some other funds, and we gave them their first money in 2011. Over 5,000 women
have been served, $37 million dollars of loans have been deferred and 5,359
jobs have been created with a 99 percent repayment rate. That’s 5,300 people
whose lives have been changed immeasurably because they had a small loan. The
average loan size is $3,200.”.” — Jennifer Pope Baker, Women’s Fund
executive director
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF SOUTHERN INDIANA, New Albany
FUND NAME: Women’s Foundation of Southern Indiana
TYPE: Giving circle
SOURCE OF FUNDS: Membership fees; individual donations; endowment
WHEN ESTABLISHED: 2005; became a giving circle in 2017
GRANTS: 2017, $50,000; 2018, $100,000; 2019, $106,000
HOW MANY MEMBERS: 139
GOVERNANCE: Advisory board with 23 this year
RESEARCH: Commissioned a research project by Indiana University Southeast on the actual needs of women in the community. Reinforced that there was a need for affordable housing, day care, health care and good transportation.
PROUDEST OF: “Being a person who’s been involved in philanthropy and many different fundraising efforts, working with a group of women that are singularly focused on helping other women in the community has just been really an amazing experience. I just think when women get together with a real purpose, amazing things happen.” — Lori Lewis, Women’s Foundation of Southern Indiana president
MADISON COUNTY COMMUNITY FOUNDATION, Anderson
FUND NAME: Women in Philanthropy
TYPE: Special interest
SOURCE OF FUNDS: Century Club; annual luncheon event; endowment of over $100,000
WHEN ESTABLISHED: 2005
GRANTS: Still actively growing endowment
HOW MANY MEMBERS: 200
GOVERNANCE: Committee that meets monthly to plan luncheon
RESEARCH: Informal
PROUDEST OF: “That it started from scratch, it started from nothing and look where we are. In the last couple of years, we had a drive to increase our endowment to $100,000 and we reached that in no time flat, so we just said, ‘Hey, you did so well on that, let’s go for another $100,000 in the endowment, and we’ll be able to start giving away some significant money.’” Sally DeVoe, Madison County Community Foundation executive director and founder of Women in Philanthropy